World
Unification Church: A global religious movement
Members of the Unification Church, known officially as the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification (FFWPU), attend a rally in Seoul on August 18, 2022, to protest against the media coverage the group received in Japan following the assassination in early July of former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe. The Japanese government said on October 12, 2023 it will seek a court order to dissolve the Unification Church, which has been under intense scrutiny since the assassination of former prime minister Shinzo Abe. — AFP pic

TOKYO, Oct 12 — Japan today said it would seek a court order to end government recognition of the Unification Church, a global religious movement thrust back into the spotlight since the assassination of former prime minister Shinzo Abe.

Here are some details about the church, founded in South Korea and famed for its mass weddings and business connections:

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What is the Unification Church?

Known officially as the Family Federation for World Peace and Unification, the church was founded in 1954 by Sun Myung Moon after he was rejected by mainstream Protestant churches.

Its members are sometimes colloquially known as "Moonies".

Moon, born to a farming family in what is now North Korea, saw his role as completing the unfulfilled mission of Jesus to restore humanity to a state of "sinless" purity.

Rapid early recruitment saw the church's membership swell from an initial group of 100 missionaries to around 10,000 in just a few years.

By the time of Moon's death in 2012, the church, whose teachings are based on new interpretations of the Bible, claimed to have about three million followers.

Where are they active?

Some experts say membership has fallen sharply from a peak in the 1980s to several hundred thousand.

The Japan chapter was founded in 1959 after the church sent missionaries there and to the United States in the late 1950s, cultivating business-minded members.

For decades, the organisation has been known for its mass weddings, often held in giant sports stadiums with thousands of couples who are often unknown to each other.

Moon moved to the United States in the early 1970s and was indicted on tax evasion charges in 1981. He was convicted and served 11 months in prison.

Who was the founder?

Moon was revered by his followers but denounced by critics as a cult-building charlatan.

Born in 1920, he studied engineering at a high school in Tokyo, and said he had a vision at age 15 in which Jesus asked him to complete his work on Earth.

He made his first world tour in 1965, going on to acquire a business empire that encompassed construction, food, education, the media and even, at one point, a professional football club.

By some counts, he had 14 children with his wife Hak Ja Han, who now controls the church.

Their youngest son, Hyung Jin Moon, succeeded his father as the church's most senior leader in 2008, but after a falling-out with his mother formed his own sect, the Sanctuary Church.

What were Abe's links to the church?

Groups affiliated with the church have secured speaking engagements from powerful speakers over the years, including former US president Donald Trump.

Abe had spoken to events organised by some of the groups and received some criticism for doing so.

In 2021, a group of Japanese lawyers filed a letter of protest after he delivered a video message for such an event.

The lawyers, who defend people they say lost money because of the church, also protested when Abe sent a telegram to a mass wedding of the church's followers in 2006.

Since Abe's murder in July 2022, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party has ordered its lawmakers to cut ties with the group. — AFP

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